How a cockerel sealed the enduring fame of a Dentist
Medicine and dentistry are quite separate professions and each has its own heroes, in one unusual instance from the same family.
Medicine and dentistry are quite separate professions and each has its own heroes, in one unusual instance from the same family.
How would you like to make a journey in a Bugatti Veyron?
How bizarre that I should find myself exposed to theories around the development of the teeth and jaws not from a dental meeting or publication but BBC Radio 4’s Food programme.
Orthodontics has undoubtedly become a hot topic.
Traffic lights are currently in vogue in the dental world
One of the medical advances I continue to marvel at is the application of stem cells, the body’s master cells, for treating a range of diseases.
In the world of orthodontics, Orthodontic Therapists have rapidly become established as part of the workforce.
I find it fascinating to read about the dental pioneers who painstakingly trialled new materials for the benefit of patients.
The dental profession can often seem distanced from healthcare as a whole, despite the growing body of evidence which reinforces the close integration of oral health and overall health.
Patients sometimes have a bugbear about the shape of individual teeth as well as the overall appearance of their smile.
Immediately above my surgery at 57a Wimpole Street, another specialist is practising a very different kind of dentistry.
Each of the lingual systems I use has its advantages. As the first cases that I have treated with Suresmile are nearing completion, I reflect on its benefits.